Deck 1: Adolescence and Delinquency

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Question
A law violation by a young person is considered an act of juvenile delinquency only if the behavior meets which of the following criteria?

A) The act involved would be a criminal offense if it were committed by an adult.
B) The young person charged with committing the act is below the age at which the criminal court traditionally assumes jurisdiction.
C) The juvenile is charged with an offense that must be adjudicated in the juvenile court or the prosecution and the juvenile court judge exercise their discretion to lodge and retain jurisdiction in the juvenile court.
D) All of the above
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Question
By ________, every state but one had passed laws prohibiting the employment in industry of children under a certain age, generally 14.

A) 1884
B) 1914
C) 1934
D) 1954
Question
The children's rights movement, which encompasses a spectrum of approaches, became popular in the 1970s as a means to compensate for ________.

A) the facilitated development of personal identity
B) an expedited search for a personal set of values
C) young people's lack of rights
D) the development of skills necessary for positive social interaction
Question
The population of juveniles, according to a U.S. Census Bureau estimate, will increase ________ percent between 2000 and 2025.

A) 10
B) 14
C) 24
D) 30
Question
Which of the following acts of adolescents would NOT be considered a high-risk behavior?

A) break dancing
B) drunken driving
C) drug and alcohol abuse
D) carrying of weapons
Question
Which of the following behaviors is NOT a law violation when committed by a juvenile?

A) curfew violations
B) runaway behavior
C) incorrigibility
D) multiple body piercings
Question
Behaviors that would NOT be offenses when engaged in by adults are called ________.

A) victimless crimes
B) delinquent behaviors
C) serious offenses
D) status offenses
Question
Under parens patriae, the ________ assumed the parental role over juvenile lawbreakers.

A) state
B) parents
C) teachers
D) neighbors
Question
Juvenile court codes usually specific that the court has jurisdiction in relation to three categories of conditions. Which is NOT one of these categories of conditions?

A) delinquency
B) dependency
C) criminality
D) neglect
Question
In 41 states and the District of Columbia, persons under ________ years of age charged with a law violation are considered juveniles.

A) 15
B) 16
C) 17
D) 18
Question
The deinstitutionalization of status offenders movement refers to the ________.

A) confinement of status offenders in secure detention facilities
B) removal of status offenders from secure detention facilities
C) power struggle between parents and status offenders
D) discrimination against female status offenders
Question
Which of the following was NOT among the principal objectives of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974?

A) promote deinstitutionalization of status offenders
B) encourage elimination of the practice of jailing juveniles
C) encourage community-based alternatives to juvenile detention
D) promote the development of correctional facilities
Question
Which of the following is NOT a term used to describe crossover youth?

A) dually adjudicated youth
B) cross-system cases
C) human agency cases
D) dual-jurisdiction cases
Question
In the early 1990s, which of the following became a major impetus for the development and spread of drug-trafficking street gangs across the United States?

A) crack epidemic
B) parental control
C) deinstitutionalization of juveniles
D) unemployment epidemic
Question
The "get-tough" attitude in the 1990s led to enacting of legislation in nearly every state changing the way juvenile delinquents were handled. Which of the following is NOT among the state initiatives in juvenile justice that continues in force today?

A) expanded use of curfews
B) creation of juvenile boot camps
C) movement toward graduated sanctions
D) banning of violence in video games
Question
At the individual level, one of the most important concepts in the area of delinquency prevention is ________. That is, juveniles are able to persevere in the face of difficulty and become productive citizens of their communities.

A) stringency
B) rigidity
C) defeat
D) resiliency
Question
Which of the following is NOT an issue that the Developmental Life-Course theory is concerned with?

A) the development of offending and antisocial behavior
B) the risk of offending at different ages
C) the effects of life events on the course of a person's social and personal development
D) the legal basis of juvenile court decisions
Question
Which of the following themes examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences?

A) parens patriae
B) legal context of delinquency
C) deinstitutionalization of status offenders
D) Developmental Life-Course theory
Question
Which term recognizes that juveniles are influenced by social opportunities and structural constraints, and make personal choices from among the options that they believe they are facing?

A) delinquency
B) high-risk behavior
C) human agency
D) antisocial behavior
Question
The three themes in the study of delinquency are delinquency prevention, delinquency across the life course, and delinquency and ________.

A) historical policy
B) economic policy
C) social policy
D) legal policy
Question
________ identifies appropriate methods to collect data, helps to identify concepts to be studied, tests ideas for their impact on the subject under study, analyzes related concepts, and suggests new directions for theorizing.

A) Philosophy
B) Theory
C) Research
D) Policy
Question
Miller v. Alabama (2016) made retroactive the end of life without parole for those sentenced as juveniles.
Question
Adolescence is considered to be the years between ages 11 and 17.
Question
Until child labor laws were actually enforced, children as young as ages four and five worked in mines, mills, and factories.
Question
High-risk youths typically do not have educational and vocational skill deficits.
Question
The average American delinquent today is far more likely to commit a serious violent crime than to commit petty theft.
Question
Status offenses would be defined as criminal if adults committed them.
Question
Juvenile court codes exist in every state.
Question
The juvenile court may intervene in cases involving dependency and neglect.
Question
The age at which a youthful offender is no longer treated as a juvenile is consistent across the states.
Question
Status offenders frequently come from single-parent homes and often engage in verbal and physical abuse directed toward the parent(s).
Question
The deinstitutionalization of status offenders has received considerable pushback in the past few decades.
Question
Meda Chesney-Lind and Linda Pasko argue that the juvenile justice system discriminates against girls.
Question
Public whippings and expulsion from the community were common punishments for chronic offenders during the Reform Agenda era.
Question
The major purpose of the reform agenda of the late 1970s was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
Question
By the early 2000s, the use of guns had spread from individuals involved in drug transactions to larger numbers of young people, and the availability and use of guns, the spread of the drug market, and the growth of street gangs all contributed to a dramatic rise in murder rates among young people.
Question
At the individual level, one of the most important concepts in the area of delinquency prevention is resiliency.
Question
Delinquency prevention asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
Question
The life interval between childhood and adulthood, usually the period between the ages of twelve and eighteen years, is called ________.
Question
An act committed by a minor that violates the penal code of the government with authority over the area in which the act occurs is called juvenile ________.
Question
Of the 25 million adolescents in the United States, approximately one in ________ is at high risk for engaging in multiple problem behaviors.
Question
Beginning in the late 1980s and extending throughout the 1990s, adolescents participated widely in youth ________.
Question
Juvenile court codes specify the conditions under which states can ________ intervene in a juvenile's life.
Question
Juvenile court codes usually specify that the court has jurisdiction in relation to three categories of conditions: delinquency, ________, and neglect.
Question
Generally speaking, status offenders, many of whom come from ________ homes, place the blame for their problems on parental figures in the home and believe that fulfilling their need for a warm, accepting, and loving relationship with their parents is not possible.
Question
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDA) of 1974 served as an impetus for the ________ of status offenders.
Question
The most severe form of treatment of juveniles is the belief that juveniles who commit serious crimes or continue to break the law are presumed to deserve punishment rather than treatment. These juveniles are punished more like ________ that juveniles.
Question
Beginning in the 1980s and continuing through today, young people became increasingly involved in various forms of ________ crimes, or crimes committed because of a victim's racial or ethnic characteristics, or religious or gender preferences.
Question
The ________ of delinquency can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
Question
Youth are generally considered ________ when they are able to rely on apparently innate characteristics to fend off or recover from life's misfortunes.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Colonial Period

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-House of Refuge

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Juvenile Courts

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Juvenile Rights

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Reform Agenda

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Social Control and Juvenile Crime

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Delinquency and the Growing Fear of Crime

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-A New Understanding of Juvenile Behavior Emerges

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
Question
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency prevention

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
Question
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency across the life course

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
Question
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency and social policy

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
Question
What is a "youth culture"and what does it involve?
Question
Identify the difficulties many high-risk youth often experience.
Question
Discuss the three categories of juvenile behavior in which the juvenile court has jurisdiction
Question
Summarize the six arguments given for the removal of status offenders from the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.
Question
Several interrelated social trends have recently emerged that have influenced delinquency in U.S. society in rather dramatic ways. Discuss these trends and how they have influenced delinquency.
Question
What are the four key elements of the Developmental Life-Course theory? Explain them in context of the theory.
Question
What factors do you think might propel a status offender into more severe kinds of offenses?
Question
A status offense is a nondelinquent/noncriminal offense; an offense that is illegal for underage persons but not for adults. Status offenses include curfew violations, incorrigibility, running away, truancy, and underage drinking. Why might underage persons commit these various offenses?
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Deck 1: Adolescence and Delinquency
1
A law violation by a young person is considered an act of juvenile delinquency only if the behavior meets which of the following criteria?

A) The act involved would be a criminal offense if it were committed by an adult.
B) The young person charged with committing the act is below the age at which the criminal court traditionally assumes jurisdiction.
C) The juvenile is charged with an offense that must be adjudicated in the juvenile court or the prosecution and the juvenile court judge exercise their discretion to lodge and retain jurisdiction in the juvenile court.
D) All of the above
All of the above
2
By ________, every state but one had passed laws prohibiting the employment in industry of children under a certain age, generally 14.

A) 1884
B) 1914
C) 1934
D) 1954
1914
3
The children's rights movement, which encompasses a spectrum of approaches, became popular in the 1970s as a means to compensate for ________.

A) the facilitated development of personal identity
B) an expedited search for a personal set of values
C) young people's lack of rights
D) the development of skills necessary for positive social interaction
young people's lack of rights
4
The population of juveniles, according to a U.S. Census Bureau estimate, will increase ________ percent between 2000 and 2025.

A) 10
B) 14
C) 24
D) 30
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5
Which of the following acts of adolescents would NOT be considered a high-risk behavior?

A) break dancing
B) drunken driving
C) drug and alcohol abuse
D) carrying of weapons
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6
Which of the following behaviors is NOT a law violation when committed by a juvenile?

A) curfew violations
B) runaway behavior
C) incorrigibility
D) multiple body piercings
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7
Behaviors that would NOT be offenses when engaged in by adults are called ________.

A) victimless crimes
B) delinquent behaviors
C) serious offenses
D) status offenses
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8
Under parens patriae, the ________ assumed the parental role over juvenile lawbreakers.

A) state
B) parents
C) teachers
D) neighbors
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9
Juvenile court codes usually specific that the court has jurisdiction in relation to three categories of conditions. Which is NOT one of these categories of conditions?

A) delinquency
B) dependency
C) criminality
D) neglect
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10
In 41 states and the District of Columbia, persons under ________ years of age charged with a law violation are considered juveniles.

A) 15
B) 16
C) 17
D) 18
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11
The deinstitutionalization of status offenders movement refers to the ________.

A) confinement of status offenders in secure detention facilities
B) removal of status offenders from secure detention facilities
C) power struggle between parents and status offenders
D) discrimination against female status offenders
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following was NOT among the principal objectives of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974?

A) promote deinstitutionalization of status offenders
B) encourage elimination of the practice of jailing juveniles
C) encourage community-based alternatives to juvenile detention
D) promote the development of correctional facilities
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
13
Which of the following is NOT a term used to describe crossover youth?

A) dually adjudicated youth
B) cross-system cases
C) human agency cases
D) dual-jurisdiction cases
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In the early 1990s, which of the following became a major impetus for the development and spread of drug-trafficking street gangs across the United States?

A) crack epidemic
B) parental control
C) deinstitutionalization of juveniles
D) unemployment epidemic
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The "get-tough" attitude in the 1990s led to enacting of legislation in nearly every state changing the way juvenile delinquents were handled. Which of the following is NOT among the state initiatives in juvenile justice that continues in force today?

A) expanded use of curfews
B) creation of juvenile boot camps
C) movement toward graduated sanctions
D) banning of violence in video games
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
16
At the individual level, one of the most important concepts in the area of delinquency prevention is ________. That is, juveniles are able to persevere in the face of difficulty and become productive citizens of their communities.

A) stringency
B) rigidity
C) defeat
D) resiliency
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
17
Which of the following is NOT an issue that the Developmental Life-Course theory is concerned with?

A) the development of offending and antisocial behavior
B) the risk of offending at different ages
C) the effects of life events on the course of a person's social and personal development
D) the legal basis of juvenile court decisions
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following themes examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences?

A) parens patriae
B) legal context of delinquency
C) deinstitutionalization of status offenders
D) Developmental Life-Course theory
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which term recognizes that juveniles are influenced by social opportunities and structural constraints, and make personal choices from among the options that they believe they are facing?

A) delinquency
B) high-risk behavior
C) human agency
D) antisocial behavior
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
20
The three themes in the study of delinquency are delinquency prevention, delinquency across the life course, and delinquency and ________.

A) historical policy
B) economic policy
C) social policy
D) legal policy
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k this deck
21
________ identifies appropriate methods to collect data, helps to identify concepts to be studied, tests ideas for their impact on the subject under study, analyzes related concepts, and suggests new directions for theorizing.

A) Philosophy
B) Theory
C) Research
D) Policy
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22
Miller v. Alabama (2016) made retroactive the end of life without parole for those sentenced as juveniles.
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23
Adolescence is considered to be the years between ages 11 and 17.
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24
Until child labor laws were actually enforced, children as young as ages four and five worked in mines, mills, and factories.
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25
High-risk youths typically do not have educational and vocational skill deficits.
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26
The average American delinquent today is far more likely to commit a serious violent crime than to commit petty theft.
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27
Status offenses would be defined as criminal if adults committed them.
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28
Juvenile court codes exist in every state.
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29
The juvenile court may intervene in cases involving dependency and neglect.
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30
The age at which a youthful offender is no longer treated as a juvenile is consistent across the states.
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31
Status offenders frequently come from single-parent homes and often engage in verbal and physical abuse directed toward the parent(s).
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32
The deinstitutionalization of status offenders has received considerable pushback in the past few decades.
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33
Meda Chesney-Lind and Linda Pasko argue that the juvenile justice system discriminates against girls.
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34
Public whippings and expulsion from the community were common punishments for chronic offenders during the Reform Agenda era.
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35
The major purpose of the reform agenda of the late 1970s was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
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36
By the early 2000s, the use of guns had spread from individuals involved in drug transactions to larger numbers of young people, and the availability and use of guns, the spread of the drug market, and the growth of street gangs all contributed to a dramatic rise in murder rates among young people.
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37
At the individual level, one of the most important concepts in the area of delinquency prevention is resiliency.
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38
Delinquency prevention asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
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39
The life interval between childhood and adulthood, usually the period between the ages of twelve and eighteen years, is called ________.
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40
An act committed by a minor that violates the penal code of the government with authority over the area in which the act occurs is called juvenile ________.
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41
Of the 25 million adolescents in the United States, approximately one in ________ is at high risk for engaging in multiple problem behaviors.
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42
Beginning in the late 1980s and extending throughout the 1990s, adolescents participated widely in youth ________.
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43
Juvenile court codes specify the conditions under which states can ________ intervene in a juvenile's life.
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44
Juvenile court codes usually specify that the court has jurisdiction in relation to three categories of conditions: delinquency, ________, and neglect.
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45
Generally speaking, status offenders, many of whom come from ________ homes, place the blame for their problems on parental figures in the home and believe that fulfilling their need for a warm, accepting, and loving relationship with their parents is not possible.
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46
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDA) of 1974 served as an impetus for the ________ of status offenders.
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47
The most severe form of treatment of juveniles is the belief that juveniles who commit serious crimes or continue to break the law are presumed to deserve punishment rather than treatment. These juveniles are punished more like ________ that juveniles.
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48
Beginning in the 1980s and continuing through today, young people became increasingly involved in various forms of ________ crimes, or crimes committed because of a victim's racial or ethnic characteristics, or religious or gender preferences.
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49
The ________ of delinquency can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
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50
Youth are generally considered ________ when they are able to rely on apparently innate characteristics to fend off or recover from life's misfortunes.
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51
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Colonial Period

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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52
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-House of Refuge

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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53
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Juvenile Courts

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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54
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Juvenile Rights

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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55
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Reform Agenda

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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56
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Social Control and Juvenile Crime

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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57
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-Delinquency and the Growing Fear of Crime

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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58
Match each juvenile delinquency with its description to historical era of societal response.

-A New Understanding of Juvenile Behavior Emerges

A) (late 1970s) The major purpose of this plan was to divert the handling of status offenses from a criminal to a noncriminal setting.
B) (1990-2010) The "get tough"
Attitude toward violent juveniles led to a number of juvenile justice initiatives in the 1990s and extending to the twenty-first century that went beyond those implemented in the 1980s.
C) (1980s) The major thrusts were to reassess the soft-line approach to minor offenders and status offenders and to "get tough"
On serious and violent juvenile crime.
D) (1967-1975) In several court decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court granted juveniles due process rights in the juvenile justice system.
E) (1636-1823) The family was the primary means of social control of children; recalcitrant children then suffered public whippings, dunking (partial drowning), and the stocks.
F) (1824-1898) Wayward children were placed in facilities intended to reform them.
G) (2010 to present) Increased understanding of juvenile behavior resulting from studies in neurobiology and developmental psychology that recognized significant differences between the minds of juveniles and adults.
H) (1899-1966) Created in Cook County, Illinois, and used parens patriae as a legal philosophy, this court handles all illegal behaviors among juveniles.
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59
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency prevention

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
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60
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency across the life course

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
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61
Match each theme of the text with each theme of the text description.

-Delinquency and social policy

A) Examines risk factors that contribute to delinquent behavior and asks how such behavior affects subsequent life experiences.
B) Asks what can be done to improve the quality of young people's lives and provides ideas for effectively treating and controlling youth crime.
C) Can be accomplished by effective social programs, or it may involve efforts to enhance the personal characteristics that shield young people from negative environmental influences as they are growing up.
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62
What is a "youth culture"and what does it involve?
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63
Identify the difficulties many high-risk youth often experience.
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64
Discuss the three categories of juvenile behavior in which the juvenile court has jurisdiction
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65
Summarize the six arguments given for the removal of status offenders from the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.
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66
Several interrelated social trends have recently emerged that have influenced delinquency in U.S. society in rather dramatic ways. Discuss these trends and how they have influenced delinquency.
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67
What are the four key elements of the Developmental Life-Course theory? Explain them in context of the theory.
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68
What factors do you think might propel a status offender into more severe kinds of offenses?
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69
A status offense is a nondelinquent/noncriminal offense; an offense that is illegal for underage persons but not for adults. Status offenses include curfew violations, incorrigibility, running away, truancy, and underage drinking. Why might underage persons commit these various offenses?
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